Find link
language:
af: Afrikaans
als: Alemannisch
[Alemannic]
am: አማርኛ
[Amharic]
an: aragonés
[Aragonese]
ar: العربية
[Arabic]
arz: مصرى
[Egyptian Arabic]
as: অসমীয়া
[Assamese]
ast: asturianu
[Asturian]
az: azərbaycanca
[Azerbaijani]
azb: تۆرکجه
[Southern Azerbaijani]
ba: башҡортса
[Bashkir]
bar: Boarisch
[Bavarian]
bat-smg: žemaitėška
[Samogitian]
be: беларуская
[Belarusian]
be-tarask: беларуская (тарашкевіца)
[Belarusian (Taraškievica)]
bg: български
[Bulgarian]
bn: বাংলা
[Bengali]
bpy: বিষ্ণুপ্রিয়া মণিপুরী
[Bishnupriya Manipuri]
br: brezhoneg
[Breton]
bs: bosanski
[Bosnian]
bug: ᨅᨔ ᨕᨘᨁᨗ
[Buginese]
ca: català
[Catalan]
ce: нохчийн
[Chechen]
ceb: Cebuano
ckb: کوردیی ناوەندی
[Kurdish (Sorani)]
cs: čeština
[Czech]
cv: Чӑвашла
[Chuvash]
cy: Cymraeg
[Welsh]
da: dansk
[Danish]
de: Deutsch
[German]
el: Ελληνικά
[Greek]
en: English
eo: Esperanto
es: español
[Spanish]
et: eesti
[Estonian]
eu: euskara
[Basque]
fa: فارسی
[Persian]
fi: suomi
[Finnish]
fo: føroyskt
[Faroese]
fr: français
[French]
fy: Frysk
[West Frisian]
ga: Gaeilge
[Irish]
gd: Gàidhlig
[Scottish Gaelic]
gl: galego
[Galician]
gu: ગુજરાતી
[Gujarati]
he: עברית
[Hebrew]
hi: हिन्दी
[Hindi]
hr: hrvatski
[Croatian]
hsb: hornjoserbsce
[Upper Sorbian]
ht: Kreyòl ayisyen
[Haitian]
hu: magyar
[Hungarian]
hy: Հայերեն
[Armenian]
ia: interlingua
[Interlingua]
id: Bahasa Indonesia
[Indonesian]
io: Ido
is: íslenska
[Icelandic]
it: italiano
[Italian]
ja: 日本語
[Japanese]
jv: Basa Jawa
[Javanese]
ka: ქართული
[Georgian]
kk: қазақша
[Kazakh]
kn: ಕನ್ನಡ
[Kannada]
ko: 한국어
[Korean]
ku: Kurdî
[Kurdish (Kurmanji)]
ky: Кыргызча
[Kirghiz]
la: Latina
[Latin]
lb: Lëtzebuergesch
[Luxembourgish]
li: Limburgs
[Limburgish]
lmo: lumbaart
[Lombard]
lt: lietuvių
[Lithuanian]
lv: latviešu
[Latvian]
map-bms: Basa Banyumasan
[Banyumasan]
mg: Malagasy
min: Baso Minangkabau
[Minangkabau]
mk: македонски
[Macedonian]
ml: മലയാളം
[Malayalam]
mn: монгол
[Mongolian]
mr: मराठी
[Marathi]
mrj: кырык мары
[Hill Mari]
ms: Bahasa Melayu
[Malay]
my: မြန်မာဘာသာ
[Burmese]
mzn: مازِرونی
[Mazandarani]
nah: Nāhuatl
[Nahuatl]
nap: Napulitano
[Neapolitan]
nds: Plattdüütsch
[Low Saxon]
ne: नेपाली
[Nepali]
new: नेपाल भाषा
[Newar]
nl: Nederlands
[Dutch]
nn: norsk nynorsk
[Norwegian (Nynorsk)]
no: norsk bokmål
[Norwegian (Bokmål)]
oc: occitan
[Occitan]
or: ଓଡ଼ିଆ
[Oriya]
os: Ирон
[Ossetian]
pa: ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
[Eastern Punjabi]
pl: polski
[Polish]
pms: Piemontèis
[Piedmontese]
pnb: پنجابی
[Western Punjabi]
pt: português
[Portuguese]
qu: Runa Simi
[Quechua]
ro: română
[Romanian]
ru: русский
[Russian]
sa: संस्कृतम्
[Sanskrit]
sah: саха тыла
[Sakha]
scn: sicilianu
[Sicilian]
sco: Scots
sh: srpskohrvatski / српскохрватски
[Serbo-Croatian]
si: සිංහල
[Sinhalese]
simple: Simple English
sk: slovenčina
[Slovak]
sl: slovenščina
[Slovenian]
sq: shqip
[Albanian]
sr: српски / srpski
[Serbian]
su: Basa Sunda
[Sundanese]
sv: svenska
[Swedish]
sw: Kiswahili
[Swahili]
ta: தமிழ்
[Tamil]
te: తెలుగు
[Telugu]
tg: тоҷикӣ
[Tajik]
th: ไทย
[Thai]
tl: Tagalog
tr: Türkçe
[Turkish]
tt: татарча/tatarça
[Tatar]
uk: українська
[Ukrainian]
ur: اردو
[Urdu]
uz: oʻzbekcha/ўзбекча
[Uzbek]
vec: vèneto
[Venetian]
vi: Tiếng Việt
[Vietnamese]
vo: Volapük
wa: walon
[Walloon]
war: Winaray
[Waray]
yi: ייִדיש
[Yiddish]
yo: Yorùbá
[Yoruba]
zh: 中文
[Chinese]
zh-min-nan: Bân-lâm-gú
[Min Nan]
zh-yue: 粵語
[Cantonese]
jump to random article
Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Merhavia (kibbutz) 11 found (37 total)
alternate case: merhavia (kibbutz)
Dorothy Bar-Adon
(1,248 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
born. In 1943 the Bar-Adon family moved to the moshav Merhavia , contiguous with Kibbutz Merhavia , where they lived until Dorothy's death. The closeness
Yitzhak Tabenkin
(841 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
immigrated to Ottoman Palestine, where he worked as an agricultural laborer in Merhavia and Kfar Uria. During the First World War, he worked on the Kinneret Farm
Frida Schahar-Rabinovich
(227 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
the southern Tzahala in Tel Aviv. She studied Hebrew in a studio at Kibbutz Merhavia . At the 1967 Israeli Women's Chess Championship, Frida Schahar-Rabinovich
Yaakov Shabtai
(598 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
Mandatory Palestine. In 1957, after completing military service, he joined Kibbutz Merhavia , but returned to Tel Aviv in 1967. His daughter, Hamutal Shabtai, wrote
Arthur Ruppin
(1,684 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
Sejera, and helped building the first kibbutz – Degania, as well as helping to support and organize Kinneret, Merhavia and other settlements. Later, he supported
Land reform in Germany
(1,461 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
were tasked with the creation of Merhavia by the Zionist Congress, which later became a successful Moshav and Kibbutz . Inspired by the reform theories
Google Street View in Asia
(1,732 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
Region Major cities/areas Northern District Kfar Kama, Kibbutz Merhavia Haifa District Haifa, Nahsholim Tel Aviv District Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan Safari Jerusalem
List of moshavim
(204 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
Southern District Me'ona מְעוֹנָה 1949 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District Merhavia (moshav) מֶרְחַבְיָה 1922 Jezreel Valley Northern District Meron, Israel
Israeli printmaking
(6,737 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
photographs. Zvi Zohar and Eugen Kolb, The Israeli Graphic, (Ha-Kibbutz Artzi, Merhavia : Sifriat Poalim, 1960), p. 9. Another textual review of the Israeli
Battle of Bint Jbeil
(8,195 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
Maj. Roi Klein (Bat. 51 of the Golani Brigade), 31, of Eli Lt. Amihai Merhavia (Bat. 51 of the Golani Brigade), 24, of Eli Lt. Alexander Shwartzman (Bat
List of German utopian communities
(2,095 words)
[view diff]
no match in snippet
view article
find links to article
were tasked with the creation of Merhavia by the Zionist Congress, which later became a successful Moshav and Kibbutz . The Prussian and later German government